Monday, February 26, 2018

Teachers Deserve a Fighting Chance to Survive a School Shooter


During a February 25, 2018, interview on FoxNews Sunday, Chris Wallace asked Florida Governor Rick Scott about arming teachers. Governor Scott said, in effect, he was willing to sacrifice one to two classrooms full of students rather than allow teachers to carry concealed weapons on campus. Surely the Governor would take great umbrage at that conclusion. Still, what he said was that he wanted “teachers to teach” and law enforcement to handle active shooters—sentiments echoed by various teachers and others in clips preceding the interview as well as news clips across the broadcast media.

History has shown that at some point, a determined attacker can usually defeat a peripheral defense. Given the nature of our government, one can expect determined attackers to find various ways through the perimeters of “hardened schools.” Unless “law enforcement” can instantly identify, locate and confront the threat immediately, it seems likely that at least one room will suffer casualties. In all likelihood, more than one room will come under attack as law enforcement verifies the active shooter reports and moves to where they can effectively engage the perpetrator. Beyond that, we will not rehash the arguments for allowing qualified teachers to voluntarily arm themselves as long as they keep their weapons concealed. Keep in mind that Florida is a “shall issue” state, see below, so many Floridians have concealed carry permits already.

If you are a teacher who “doesn’t want the responsibility to protect children,” please look over the following short exercise:

·       Presumably every teacher has a few memorable great days during their teaching career. Pick out the best of those that comes to mind and replay it in your mind. Then, scroll down to the next step; if you don’t work in education, think of your best moment in school.



              
Move through the experience to that peak moment

Then scroll down or look down



·         “Oh my God! O my God!!!” No!!”

o   You hear the voice of your friend and coffee-break-mate in the next room; rapid gunfire suddenly silences your colleague

o   You immediately report the active shooter, lock both doors, and simultaneously direct your class to perform their well-practiced “Active Shooter: Shelter in Place” procedures

·       Hearing the sound of children running and gunfire now coming from the hallway, you silently hope the shooter picks some other room

·       While trying to comfort and silence a whimpering student, you hear the rattle of the locked door at the far end of your room

·       A gunshot rings out as a bullet flies through the door followed by more rattling

·       A second gunshot sends pieces of the lock flying into the room; a couple of yanks and the door opens outwardly into the hallway

What do you do now?
You have to do something. Pick up scissors and a yardstick? Hide under the desk? Wait quietly? If you have a concealed carry permit and a handgun, the firearm sits at home—safely locked in a strong safe. Of course, if that 9 mm was concealed on your hip, you would have additional options. Certainly, absent a video feed, firing at the rattling door alone seems out of order. Once the shooter fires through the door, you know you can safely return fire. Immediately sending three or four shots back through the door seems like a good choice. Less desirably, you can wait for the shooter to burst into the room. Unarmed, you have no good choices. Armed, you at least “have a fighting chance.”
 So, you may not want the responsibility of protecting students; but, I hope you at least want to protect yourself. If the Florida PE Teacher who bravely stood between his students and the shooter had carried a 9 mm automatic, he and many of the murdered students might today be discussing their terrifying experience; the teacher might be talking about how frightened he was to stand down an M-16 with a tiny 9 mm pistol.

Shall Issue State: This term applies to states that have passed laws requiring the issuance of concealed carry permits to anyone who passes the rigorous requirements. Such states do not require the applicant to show a capriciously interpreted “good reason” for a carry permit. Most such states enjoyed markedly reduced crime rates after enacting their “shall issue" ordinances.

DJ